Professional Documents
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L-17821
encroachments, and authorities are clear that they are, validly conferable upon executive officials
provided the party affected is given opportunity to be heard, as is expressly required by Republic Act
No. 2056, section 2.
It thus appears that the delegation by Congress to executive or administrative agencies of
functions of judicial, or at least, quasi-judicial functions is incidental to the exercise by such
agencies of their executive or administrative powers, is not in violation of the Separation of
Powers so far as that principle is recognized by the Federal Constitution nor is it in violation
of due process of law. (3 Willoughby on the Const. of the U.S., pp. 1654-1655)
The mere fact that an officer is required by law to inquire the existence of certain facts and to
apply the law thereto in order to determine what his official conduct shall be and the fact that
these acts may affect private, rights do not constitute an exercise of judicial powers.
Accordingly, a statute may give to non-judicial officers the power to declare the existence of
facts which call into operation its provisions, and similarly may grant to commissioners and
other subordinate officer, power to ascertain and determine appropriate facts as a basis for
procedure in the enforcement of particular laws. (11 Am. Jur., Const. Law, p. 950, sec. 235)
s. 237. Powers to determine cases within Statute. One important class of cases in which
discretion may properly be vested in administrative officers, which class is almost an
operation of the general rule relating to the ascertainment of facts, consists of those cases in
which a general rule or prohibition is laid down and power is vested in an executive officer to
determine when particular cases do or do not fall within such rule or prohibition. Power
exercised under such statutes, calling for the exercise of judgment in the execution of a
ministerial act, is never judicial in nature within the sense prohibited by the Constitution. (11
Am. Jur., Const. Law, sec. 237, p. 952)
A direct precedent can be found in the "Bridge cases" upholding the constitutionality of the U.S.
River and Harbor Act of March 3, 1899, that empowered (sec. 18) the Secretary of War to take
action, after hearing, for the removal or alteration of bridges unreasonably obstructing navigation. On
the issue of undue delegation of power, the U.S. Supreme Court ruled as follows:
Congress thereby declared that whenever the Secretary of War should find any bridge
theretofore or thereafter constructed over any of the navigable waterways of the United
States to be an unreasonable obstruction to the free navigation of such waters on account of
insufficient height, width of span, or otherwise, it should be the duty of the Secretary, after
hearing the parties concerned, to take action looking to the removal or alteration of the
bridge, so as to render navigation through or under it reasonably free, easy, and
unobstructed. As this court repeatedly has held, this is not an unconstitutional delegation of
legislative or judicial power to the Secretary. Union Bridge Co. vs. United States, 204 U.S.
364, 385, 51 L. ed. 523, 533, 27 Sup. Ct. Rep. 367; Monongahela Bridge Co. v. United
States, 216 U.S. 177, 192,54 L. ed. 435, 441, 30 Sup. Ct. Rep. 356; Hannibal Bridge Co. v.
United States, 221 U.S. 194. 205, 55 L. ed. 699, 703, 31 Sup. Ct. Rep. 603. The statute itself
prescribes the general rule applicable to all navigable waters, and merely charged the
Secretary of War with the duty of ascertaining in each case, upon notice to the parties
concerned, whether the particular bridge came within the general rule. Of course, the
Secretary's finding must be based upon the conditions as they exist at the time he acts. But
the law imposing this duty upon him speaks from the time of its enactment. (Louisville Bridge
Co. v. U.S., 61 L. ed. 395). (Emphasis supplied)
Appellees invoke American rulings that abatement as nuisances of properties of great value can not
be done except through court proceedings; but these rulings refer
to summary abatements without previous hearing, and are inapplicable to the case before us where
the law provides, and the investigator actually held, a hearing with notice to the complainants and
the, appellees, who appeared therein. It is noteworthy that Republic Act 2605 authorizes removal of
the unauthorized dikes either as "public nuisances or as prohibited constructions" on public
navigable streams, and those of appellees clearly are in the latter class.
It may not be amiss to state that the power of the Secretary of Public Works to investigate and clear
public streams free from unauthorized encroachments and obstructions was granted as far back as
Act 3208 of the old Philippine Legislature, and has been upheld by this Court (Palanca vs.
Commonwealth, supra; Meneses vs. Commonwealth, 69 Phil. 647). We do not believe that the
absence of an express appeal to the courts under the present Republic Act 2056 is a substantial
difference, so far as the Constitution is concerned, for it is a well-known rule that due process does
not have to be judicial process; and moreover, the judicial review of the Secretary's decision would
always remain, even if not expressly granted, whenever his act violates the law or the Constitution,
or imports abuse of discretion amounting to excess of jurisdiction.
The argument that the action of the Secretary amounts to a confiscation of private property leads us
directly to the issue of fact whether a navigable portion of the Bulati creek had once traversed the
registered lot of the appellees Lovina and connected with Manampil creek that borders said lot on
the northwest before it was closed by Jose de Leon, Lovina's predecessor. The Secretary of Public
Works has found from the evidence before him that, originally, the sapang (creek) Bulati flowed
across the property in question, and connected the Nasi river withsapang Manampil; that in 1926 or
thereabouts, the Bulati creek was 2 meters deep at high tide and 1/2 meter deep at low tide, and the
people used it as fishing grounds and as a communication way, navigating along its length in
bancas; that former registered owner, Jose de Jesus, closed about meters of the course of
the sapangBulati that lay within the lot in question by constructing dams or dikes at both sides and
converting the lot into a fishpond.
The appellees, on the other hand, rely on the 1916 registration plan of the property (Exh. C),
showing it to be merely bounded by the Bulati creek on the southeast, as well as on the testimony
introduced at the hearing of prohibition case (over the objection of the Government counsel) that the
Bulati creek did not enter the property.
The Court of First Instance found that "according to the location plan, Exhibit "C", the "Bulati creek,
on which dikes and dams in question were constructed was a mere estero and could not be
considered a navigable stream then." It is not explained how such fact could appear solely from the
plan Exhibit "C" (no other proof being referred to), unless indeed the court below so concluded from
the fact that in said plan the Bulati creek does not appear to run within the registered lot. The
conclusion of lower court is not supported by its premises, because by law, the issuance of a
Torrens title does not confer title navigable streams (which are fluvial highways) within registered
property, nor is it conclusive on their non-existence, unless the boundaries of such streams had
been expressly delimited in the registration plan (Act 496, sec. 39 cf. Palanca vs. Commonwealth,
69 Phil. 449; Meneses Commonwealth, 69 Phil. 647), so that delimitation of their course may be
made even after the decree of registration has become final. In the present case, in truth the very
plan of the appellees, Exhibit "C", shows parallel reentrant lines, around its point 65 and between
points 44 and that indicate the existence of a stream connecting the sapang Bulati on the southeast
and the sapang Manampil on the northwest, and which the surveyor apparently failed delimit for
some undisclosed reason. That the stream was the prolongation of thesapang Bulati, that formerly
flow across the registered lot, is also shown by the fact that appellees' plan Exhibit "C", the westward
continuation the Bulati creek (west of point 65), which bounds the registered lot, is labelled "Etero
Mabao". The plan thus corroborates the previously summarized testimony laid before investigator
Yonzon and relied upon by the Secretary in his administrative decision. Even more, appellees' own
caretaker, Yambao, showed investigator Yonzon the old course of the Bulati within the fishpond
itself; and this evidence is, likewise, confirmed by the cross-section profile of the ground near the
dams in question (See plan Annex "AA" of Yonzon's Report), where the old channel of the creek is
clearly discernible. To be sure, appellees contend that they were not shown this plan; but in their
evidence before the court of first instance, they never attempted, or offered, to prove that said plan is
incorrect.
That the creek was navigable in fact before it was closed was also testified to by the government
witnesses, whose version is corroborated as we have seen.
Considering the well-established rule that findings of fact in executive decisions in matters within
their jurisdiction are entitled to respect from the courts in the absence of fraud, collusion, or grave
abuse of discretion (Com. of Customs vs. Valencia, 54 O.G. 3505), none of which has been shown
to exist in this case, we agree with appellant that the court below erred in rejecting the findings of
fact of the Secretary of Public Works.
The findings of the Secretary can not be enervated by new evidence not laid down before him, for
that would be tantamount to holding a new investigation, and to substitute for the discretion and
judgment of the Secretary the discretion and judgment of the court, to whom the statute had
entrusted the case. It is immaterial that the present action should be one for prohibition or injunction
and not one for certiorari, in either event the case must be resolved upon the evidence submitted to
the Secretary, since a judicial review of executive decisions does not import a trial de novo, but only
an ascertainment of whether the executive findings are not in violation of the constitution or of the
laws, and are free from fraud or imposition, and whether they find reasonable support in the
evidence.1 Here, the proof preponderates in favor of the Secretary's decision.
Nevertheless, we, agree with appellees that they can not be charged with failure to exhaust
administrative remedies, for the Secretary's decision is that of the President, in the absence of
disapproval (Villena vs. Secretary of the interior, 67 Phil. 451).
Finally, there being a possibility that when they purchased the property in question the appellees
Lovina were not informed of the illegal closure of the Bulati creek, their action, if any, against their
vendor, should be, and is hereby, reserved.
In resume, we rule:
(1) That Republic Act No. 2056 does not constitute an unlawful delegation of judicial power to the
Secretary of Public Works;
(2) That absence of any mention of a navigable stream within a property covered by Torrens title
does not confer title to it nor preclude a subsequent investigation and determination of its existence;
(3) That the findings of fact of the Secretary of Public Works under Republic Act No. 2056 should be
respected in the absence of illegality, error of law, fraud, or imposition, so long as the said, findings
are supported by substantial evidence submitted to him.
(4) That ownership of a navigable stream or of its bed is not acquirable by prescription.
WHEREFORE, the decision appealed from is reversed, and the writs of injunction issued therein are
annulled and set aside. Costs against appellees Lovina.